Humanity Is Reborn in Lilith's Brood by Octavia Butler

Discover Butler's stunning vision for humanity's future.

Lilith Iyapo is alive. She knows that much. Since the disaster on Earth, her existence is defined by a series of disorienting, brutal awakenings, each return to consciousness forcing her to confront old horrors anew: her family is dead. She is the prisoner of mysterious captors who saved her from Earth's nuclear holocaust, but now leave scars on her while she sleeps. She is forced to come to terms with what once was and what her present is.

When Lilith awakens to find one of her captors in her chamber, she's determined to find out who they are and what they want from her. She must face the dark side of survival and decide how she fits into her current society. This gripping series examines the hierarchal tendencies of mankind and questions how it hinders or helps the human race. But nothing could have prepared her for the strange truth of their identity — or for what she learns about her own species.

Octavia Butler

Photo Credit: Alchetron

Known as both the Xenogenesis Trilogy and Lilith's Brood, this compelling sci-fi saga by the late Octavia Butler questions identity, culture, and what it means to be human. The trilogy begins with Dawn from the viewpoint of Lilith Iyapo, a survivor of Earth's nuclear holocaust. Her home planet is ruined. Humans are nearly extinct. A mysterious species can restore and repopulate Earth—but their aid comes with a price. She is introduced to an alien race, the Oankali, who happen to have three genders: male, female, and Ooloi.

Eventually Lilith bonds with Nikanj, an Ooloi, and the Oankali use this bond to obtain Lilith's help to train humans in the newly-restored Earth. The Oankali have made Earth habitable again and offer humans access to the planet as an exchange for interbreeding and blending the human and Oankali races. The Oankali believe their offering is the solution to humans' fatal combination of intelligence and hierarchal tendencies — but humans rebel.

The first of Butler's influential works to receive serious attention from Hollywood, Dawn will soon be adapted for the small screen by A Wrinkle in Time director Ava DuVernay. Butler, who passed away suddenly in 2006, is also the author of the prescient near-future Parable series, the Patternist series, and the standalone vampire novel Fledgling, as well as numerous short stories.